Category: coco levy

coconut dis-ease, coco levy fund, and buko juice

jarius bondoc’s column Authorities, please act on these readers’ woes includes a desperate plea from a coconut farmer.

From Mr. Bert Tomas of Tanauan, Batangas: “This is about the pestilence in my town, the rest of Batangas province, and parts of Laguna. Scale insects are infesting coconut trees, causing the leaves to turn brown and wilt. Eventually the pests attack the core of the trunk until the trees die.

“Planters have resorted to felling the trees for sale as coco-lumber, for some income before they become useless. I cannot imagine the economic hardships our planters would suffer when all their trees and earnings are gone. Millions of us depend on coconut for a living.

“Replanting coconut seedlings is useless. The insects attack young trees as well. If spared, the saplings will take five to ten years to fruit.

“Last Sept. I met with personnel from the Philippine Coconut Authority. They could do nothing as they lack funds and knowhow to combat the pestilence, they said. There are only nine of them servicing the whole Batangas.

“I personally have seen the same coconut infestation in Mt. Makiling, in adjacent Laguna province. I am hoping against hope it has not spread to the next province of Quezon.

“I have heard President Noynoy Aquino and Agriculture Sec. Proceso Alcala (who is from Quezon) talk about the bright prospects for coconut products domestically and abroad. I wonder if they, and our local officials, are aware of the problem. If they are doing something about it, we have not been informed. The country’s entire coconut industry could be wiped out.

“Please, help us send this message to the authorities, before it’s too late: save whatever is left of our coconuts.”

last year, in march, the philippine coconut authority (PCA) alloted 1.4M php to mitigate with extensive measures the scale insect infestation in affected areas in 41 barangays of seven municipalities in the province of Batangas.

june 30, the agency said only 6 percent of batangas’ total coconut area was affected by the deadly scale insects.

in october, a month after the PCA told  bert tomas that they could do nothing for lack of funds and knowhow, the department of agriculture (DA) issued a press release to the effect that the PCA was “anticipating a sigh of relief,” with coconut farmers attesting to the effectivity of the mitigating measures implemented to combat the coconut scale insect infestation, which infected nine municipalities in the province of Batangas.  obviously premature, the anticipation.

in fact the scale infestation has worsened.  check this out, from interaksyon, dated january 2013: VIDEO | After being milked dry of coco levy, Batangas farmers suffer blow from another ‘parasite.’

in february, the DA’s bureau of agricultural statistics posted this top item of the monthly regional agricultural situation report:

In Batangas, the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA) reported that 20 percent of the total area of coconut trees were greatly affected by scale insects. These were the municipalities of Sto. Tomas, Tanauan, Malvar, Mataas Na Kahoy, Talisay, Lipa City, Lemery, Calaca, Agoncillo, Laurel and Talisay. Continuous control measures like pruning, burning and spraying of crude oil and dish washing liquid were undertaken to eradicate the spread of the insects.

from 6 percent infestation in june 2012 to 20 percent in february 2013.

february 4, 2013 agham partylist rep. angelo palmones delivered a privilege speech in congress.  the scale infestation has spread to some parts of laguna and quezon, and combined efforts of government with the private sector, PPP daw, are proving woefully insufficient for lack of funds and manpower.

now we know that it’s not the usual seasonal infestation, now we know that it won’t go away without major intervention, why are not more drastic and effective measures being undertaken to combat the spread of the deadly scale infestation?  no money?  but there’s the coco levy fund.  who, what are we saving it for?  surely the ailing coconut industry deserves all-out government support.  surely this is an emergency operation that deserves funding from the billions of bucks that coconut farmers unwillingly paid for close to a decade back in the dark days of martial law; money that’s now sitting in san miguel stocks and bank deposits earning interest for who-knows-who.

considering that the prez has been promoting buko juice and waxing ecstatic about the planned $15-million dollar investment by U.S. companies, it is strange that he has not seen fit to assure us, and the foreign investors-to-come, that everything is being done, no expense being spared, to stop the infestation and rejuvenate the coco industry.

and then, again, who knows what government plans for the coco industry and the levy fund.  for all we know there is no great concern or grief for the dying trees because anyway they’re mostly old trees, past the prime of their fruiting life, time to replace them with high breeds that fruit more frequently and plentily.  hmm.  if they’re on that track, sana they’re prepared to use the levy fund to replace the lost trees, along with all the old trees that survive the scale infestation, just because coco farmers are in no position to shoulder the costs.  it’s payback time.  and sana they’re prepared to see the majority poor coco farmers through the 4 years or so until new trees start fruiting.

meanwhile, the media should be echoing the questions raised by the kapisanan ng magbubukid ng pilipinas (KMP) in 2011, posted in bulatlat.com.

The Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP) feared that the 3.3 million hectares of coconut lands would be controlled by US agro-corporations.

“We fear that Aquino’s pasalubong would replicate the experience of farmers in Mindanao where US-based agro-corporations like Del Monte and Dole now enjoy lifetime control over tens of thousands of hectares of lands,” Randall Echanis, KMP deputy secretary general, said, referring to the country’s 50-year leaseback agreement with the US corporations that is renewable for another 25 years.

Echanis called on Aquino “to divulge the terms” of the investments fearing that this could lead to “one-sided and onerous land lease deals” between the US and the Philippines.

“These land lease schemes have turned farmers into mere low wage-earning agricultural workers instead of being empowered owner-cultivators,” Echanis said adding that the schemes “undermined the rights of farmers over their lands.”

There are 3.4 million farmer-families dependent on the country’s 3.37 million hectares of land devoted to coconut or 26 percent of the country’s total agricultural lands. http://bulatlat.com/main/2011/09/29/farmers-fear-aquino-selling-out-to-foreign-firms/

… Echanis also said if the Aquino administration is really sincere in developing the coconut industry, it should “immediately return to small coconut farmers the more than P150 billion coconut levy funds trapped in his uncle Eduardo “Danding” Cojuangco’s San Miguel Corporation.”

“The $15 million investment from the US is no match to the P150 billion ($3.488 billion) coco levy funds and the billions of pesos of agricultural funds being plundered by corrupt officials. The immediate return of the coco levy funds to genuine small coconut farmers is still among the solutions for the development of the coconut industry and not through onerous and one-sided investments,” Echanis said.

hayy.  i have a sinking feeling that something’s going on, deals being made, behind the scenes that augurs well only for the usual suspects.  matuwid na daan?  more like madilim.

coco levy blues

if not for that protest action by hundreds of coconut farmers from bicol, quezon, aurora, and cagayan, demanding that malacañang’s national anti-poverty commission (NAPC) keep its hands off the coco levy fund — a protest action that turned violent because the farmers were understandably stoked by the snub of former leftist activist now NAPC chief joel rocamora and also by cops who sprayed them with fire extinguishers, cops who didn’t seem to be under orders to practise maximum tolerance, i wonder why, considering that these hundreds of farmers have every reason to be outraged by the aquino admin’s cavalier attitude re the coco levy fund, and considering that this is an election year and these rallyists represent millions of coco farmers nationwide who have been waiting to finally benefit, as promised since martial law days, from that infamous levy collected by marcos and enrile and cojuangco for over a decade ’73 to ’82 — that protest action that dzmm teleradyo’s reporters covered live, and treated by anchors just like any leftist rally, harping purely on the violation of the human rights of the one cop who was slightly hurt, and nothing, not a peep about the coco farmers as victims of plunder, nary a hint or sense of the context, of big time corruption.  if not for that protest action and the way media reported it, i would not be blogging about the coco levy now.

i had been giving the prez the benefit of the doubt, waiting for him to surprise us with a scheme that would be fair and square to coconut farmers, for a change.  alas, it would seem that senator joker arroyo is right on how coco farmers, then and now, are treated: Aquino, Marcos “birds of the same feather”

disclosure: i have a personal stake in the coco levy fund even if i am not a “poor coco farmer.” but my mother and aunts and uncles, and many more like them from tiaong, candelaria, sariaya, and lucena paid that levy, too.

According to a mid-1960s survey, more than 300,000 coconut farms were owned by 250,000 landowners. Plantations larger than 1000 hectares accounted for less than 1 per cent of the total area allocated to coconuts (Ofreneo 1980). The national average of coconut landholdings was at this time 3,41 hectares.

i gather that’s 3.41 hectares, confirmed here as less than four hectares in the early 1990s.

in the mid-60s my nanay inherited some 70 hectares of coco land from her parents, land bought with hard-earned money and planted to coconut, some in the 1880s through the 1890s, most in the 1930s.  in the late ’70s, when she had been paying the levy long enough to see that the promised benefits, such as the replacement of aging coco trees with new seedlings of a more productive breed, were not forthcoming, she sold some 20 hectares of it and divided the rest, no tenants, among 7 children, and we continued paying that levy — which started at php 15 per 100 kilograms of copra and ballooned to php 100 at some point, and then stabilized at php 76 — because we had no choice, we could only grouse in private, it was martial law.  and like many others, we have “souvenirs of deception” in our files, some stock certificates and some receipts that we never bothered to convert to stock certificates just because the process was soooo tediously frustrating and terribly enraging given that marcos enrile danding and their cohorts were making hay with our money and shamelessly enriching themselves at our expense.

so, yes, it was reason to rejoice — and to thank the tibak coco farmers groups for their vigilance — when the supreme court awarded some 70 billion php of coco levy fund assets to coconut farmers, even if it could have been double that, it would seem, if, among other anomalies, the sc had not rewarded danding with those san miguel stocks said to have been bought, too, with coco levy funds — a measure, i suppose, of danding’s and enrile’s and the marcoses’ continuing clout in the halls of justice, or maybe the attitude is simply that, tama na naman yung 70 B, after all 9.6 B lang yung nakolekta (well, officially) from ’73-’82, at pinalago na lang nina danding et al, pasalamat nga dapat ang poor coco farmers.  yeah right.  as if.  fact is, dahil ang gagaling naman talaga nina danding et al, they could actually have delivered on promises to us coco farmers while enriching themselves, but they didn’t.

At UCPB’s headquarters at Makati, said a former director, rooms were filled to the rafters with the certificates as the realization hit that it would be a logistical and administrative nightmare to deal with the millions of unshod stockholders.

medyo mata-pobre noon, tila mata-pobre pa rin ngayon.

that protest action of the farmers at the national anti-poverty commission was a wake-up call. since then i’ve been googling the presidential task force on the coco levy funds, looking for an official statement from the palace, and finding nothing.  but it would seem that concerned government officials tipped off the coco farmers groups led by anakpawis partylist and kilusang magbubukid ng pilipinas (KMP) that rocamora’s anti-poverty commission was planning to dip into coco levy funds for its condiitonal cash transfer and other dole-out programs.  read Farmers assail ‘coco levy fund mafia”, clash with cops 

Rocamora … said the inter-agency task force, of which NAPC was part, did not expect it would be able to use the coco levy funds at least until the end of the year.

“Given how the Supreme Court rules, and given the bureaucracy, the government should count itself lucky if the coco levy funds became available by the end of the year,” he said. He denied that his agency would use the funds for any political purpose.

He said it was true that the NAPC would request money once the coco levy funds become available, as the poverty alleviation programs would be used for the benefit of the poorest coconut farmers.

rocamora gives the impression that if it were up to him, we would be getting our money back, in cash.  kaya lang:

“The problem with that proposal is there is no way to identify who are the genuine beneficiaries,” he said.

He said the Supreme Court decision also specifically stated that there was to be no distribution of the coco levy funds to private individuals.

Rocamora said cash distribution would be tantamount to a “dole-out,” a criticism that had also been leveled at the government’s conditional cash transfer program.

“What makes more sense is to use the money from the coco levy for projects that will benefit the poorest coconut farmers instead of giving them out to specific individuals,” he said.

what kind of thinking is that.  i’m disappointed in rocamora who used to be a leading leftist intellectual.  kung sila ang mamimigay, magdo-dole-out ng coco levy funds to poorest-of-the-poor coco farmers as conditional cash transfer, okay lang yon.  pero kung cash distribution to all coco farmers na nag-contribute sa levy fund, dole-out din daw yon, like the CCT for which the aquino admin is already being criticized, so hindi puwede.  ano daw?

it’s not true that cash distribution would be tantamount to a dole-out.  it would be a dole-out only if coco farmers did not contribute to that levy fund in hard cash.  excuse me.  industry stakeholders kami, the seed money of 9.6B came from our pockets.  giving it back to us now, with interest, at the prevailing value of the peso, would be to compensate us for the injustice and losses and damages and distress, moral, emotional, mental, atbp. that we suffered over decades of oppression and deprivation while the powers-that-be enriched themselves using our money.  and, of course, we’ll want help replacing aging trees with new seedlings, that is, if the aquino admin is serious about wanting to uplift the moribund coconut industry.

as for the problem of identifying the genuine beneficiaries, it is a problem only in the sense that it’s a big job, drawing up that list, but there must be records in munisipyos across the nation where real estate taxes are paid that would identify the owners of coconut plantations that existed in the 70s and 80s, many of which still exist.  those that have been planted to other crops or have changed hands, well, there should be records of that, too.  the philippine coconut authority (PCA) should have records, too, unless they’ve been spirited away, shredded maybe?  meanwhile, those who have proof that they contributed to that levy, the holders of stock certificates and/or receipts, no matter how few or incomplete, should be first on the list of genuine beneficiaries, and it can be assumed that they paid that levy all through ’73-’82.  there are ways and ways of identifying us, if the aquino admin only cared enough to do right by coconut farmers, shod and unshod.

“The coco levy funds were exacted from our sweat and blood,” (KMP deputy secretary-general) Marbella said. “The money should be immediately returned to small coconut farmers and not to failed anti-peasant programs, like the CCT and CARPER,” he said.

the worst part of it is, the department of agriculture and the PCA are in the hands of a secretary, one proceso alcala, whose concern is not for coconut farmers but for other  industry stakeholders who are of course scheming to get their sticky hands on some of that 70B php.

The coconut industry stockholders favors the use of coconut levy funds for provision of farm inputs to coconut plantations and capacity building of coconut farmers, instead of distributing the proceeds in cash. 

alcala actually believes that the benefits will trickle down to the coconut farmers.  susmaryosep.

Instead, the assets should be used to rehabilitate and modernize the industry so the benefits would trickle down to the poorest coconut farmer, he said. 

thank heavens for senator joker arroyo, the only senator who has been speaking up for the coconut farmers.

“But that is exactly the same as what the martial law government promised the farmers when they collected the levies from them which in turn was used to buy the controlling interest in San Miguel. The farmers did not benefit from that investment, directly or indirectly,” Arroyo said.

Arroyo said the farmers for 26 years fought to recover these monies, but the post-EDSA administrations half-heartedly supported farmers and the industry did not.

“As to the farmers, what is important is the cash component that goes to them. Will the farmers wait until the coco industry is rehabilitated and create employment for them? That is the carrot that was waved to them in 1973,” he said.

He said, however, that the farmers are not entirely satisfied with the Supreme Court decision. “But better a loaf than no bread at all. The decision is clear and peremptory — “to be used 1) for the benefit of all coconut farmers and 2) for the development of the coconut industry.”

panahon pa ni marcos, “trickle down” benefits na ang pangako.  it should be obvious by now, after decades of “development” kuno, na epic fail yang trickle-down economics.  that alcala seems so clueless makes you wonder why he was chosen to serve as agriculture sec and head of the coconut authority.  precisely to make sure the coco levy fund assets remain in the hands of the industry’s powers-that-be?  c’mon, mr. president, you promised us CHANGE, remember?  trickle-down is soooo last century!

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Magsaysay calls for gov’t aide to coconut industry 
Open letter to President Benigno Simeon C. Aquino III
Coco levy eyed for P10-billion Hacienda Luisita payment 
Supreme Court coco levy ruling ‘too late, too obscure’—Sen. Arroyo
Victory for whom? 
Bid to use fund to prop up copra prices opposed 
Hinggil sa Coco Levy Funds – Ating Alamin